regal81455
Established Member
I'm not trying to rock any boats or stir up tense conversations, just looking for some clarity. This is about Veileds and Panthers, don't know what is recommended for all the other various subspecies so disregard them in this thread please.
Why is it that everyone recommends a 3-4 UVI when in Ambilobe ( and across Madagascar ) UVI levels average around 13 at noon through out the year and get as high as 16.
And in Yemen it gets to 10+
Chart for reference...
https://nomadseason.com/uv-index/madagascar/diana/ambilobe.html
According to the Ferguson zone info I've looked at for UVI for zone 3 should be around 1.0 - 2.6 BUT your basking area should be 2.9-7.4.
So when people suggest UVI 3-4 at the basking zone are we suggesting that simply because that's what's considered safe or because it's what is best for our animal?
With chameleons that are climbing the roofs of their enclosures, are they doing this because they want out, they are cold, or they are not getting the UVI that would be seen in the wild? Maybe ( and probably ) a combo of all three??? It would seem to me the animal would move in and out of areas with high UVI as they need it in the wild and that we should be trying to do the same. We all know to boot that the levels we see in the enclosure drop off quick both vertically and laterally. The UVI levels indicated in the referenced chart are at ground level, not up in the trees so is it even higher where they are at?
Again just asking - not trying to ruffle feathers but in my logical, questioning mind things don't seem to line up for me and I'm trying to understand why the basking zone is suggested here that it needs to be 3-4 and where that comes from. I have to be missing something...
Why is it that everyone recommends a 3-4 UVI when in Ambilobe ( and across Madagascar ) UVI levels average around 13 at noon through out the year and get as high as 16.
And in Yemen it gets to 10+
Chart for reference...
https://nomadseason.com/uv-index/madagascar/diana/ambilobe.html
According to the Ferguson zone info I've looked at for UVI for zone 3 should be around 1.0 - 2.6 BUT your basking area should be 2.9-7.4.
So when people suggest UVI 3-4 at the basking zone are we suggesting that simply because that's what's considered safe or because it's what is best for our animal?
With chameleons that are climbing the roofs of their enclosures, are they doing this because they want out, they are cold, or they are not getting the UVI that would be seen in the wild? Maybe ( and probably ) a combo of all three??? It would seem to me the animal would move in and out of areas with high UVI as they need it in the wild and that we should be trying to do the same. We all know to boot that the levels we see in the enclosure drop off quick both vertically and laterally. The UVI levels indicated in the referenced chart are at ground level, not up in the trees so is it even higher where they are at?
Again just asking - not trying to ruffle feathers but in my logical, questioning mind things don't seem to line up for me and I'm trying to understand why the basking zone is suggested here that it needs to be 3-4 and where that comes from. I have to be missing something...
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